Thursday, March 31, 2016

Entertained to Death

It is pretty clear that Hollywood and "stars" have been the bridgeheads for the spreading of Buddhism in the Western world. We're referring to the actors, the singers, soccer players or simply “famous people,” that is to say, that large crowd that performs in the mediatic circus of cinematography, television, newspapers and magazines: beings who were kissed by luck and therefore (it is difficult to see if it was a cause or an outcome) rose to notoriety. They offer to the international public their model of behavior, regardless if the public accepts it or not. Therefore, to advertise to the public a new way of life is an unavoidable aspect of their job. This is another excerpt from Roberto Dal Bosco's book "Contro il Buddismo." (The first one, which was published a short while ago on this pages, relates to the uprising of the "peaceful" Vietnamese Buddhists that led to the toppling of the government of South Viet Nam in 1963.) We hope to publish the book very soon in the United States. Meanwhile, we hope you will find these excerpts interesting.You comments will be very appreciated.Thanks.L. PaveseBuddhist Human Bestiary(by Roberto Dal Bosco)Director Oliver Stone, the author of many motion pictures about Viet Nam,
is a Buddhist. Actress Kate Bosworth, a hopeful young woman in odor of
anorexia, is a Buddhist. Goldie Hawn, her daughter Kate Hudson, Sharon Stone
and Naomi Watts are all Buddhist; as well as Sting, whose erotic confessions, a
couples of decades ago, revealed to the vast readership of the world’s
newspapers the sexual performance value of the Tantras.

Keanu Reeves is also a Buddhist. He’s the actor who played Buddha in
Bernardo Bertolucci’s colossal Buddhist propaganda production movie Little Buddha.

The pedophile poet of the beat
generation, Allen Ginsberg, said he was a Buddhist. Singer Leonard Cohen has
Buddhist sympathies, and maybe self-destructive singer Kurt Cobain, who had the
merit to popularize the word “Nirvana” once for all, was a Buddhist too.

The list is very long: the unbeatable but odd basketball coach Phil Jackson;
Canadian singer Alanis Morisette; lesbian singer K.D. Laing, drug-addict singer
Courtney Love. The old singer Patty Smith personally met the Dalai Lama and she
was awe-struck.

Sex addict, wife-cheating, pro-golfer Tiger Woods is a Buddhist because
his mother was Thai, and declared his wish to return to the faith of the
Enlightened, after his marital trouble.

Steve Jobs, the genius founder of Apple Computer, wanted a Zen monk to
officiate his wedding. Viktor Pelevin, the celebrated novelist of the new
Russia, also made it in the list of Buddhist converts; where even Lisa Simpson,
the smart daughter of Homer Simpson, can be found.

In a previous chapter, we told of how Buddha, half a millennium ago, was
rejected by the first Westerners who had discovered him: the Christian
missionaries. Things went better with the 17th and 18th
century European aristocratic intellectuals looking for a thrill; and the
Western fascination with the Orient began.

But the true breach was really opened at the end of the nineteen
hundreds, when Buddhism reached the Euro-American masses to the point of
becoming a religion with a great following that aspires to replace
Christianity, not really as a mass cult but rather as the spiritual background
against which people unfold their every-day lives.

It is not a secret that “stars” have been the bridgeheads of this process
of infiltration: actors, singers, soccer players or simply “famous people,”
that is to say, that large crowd that participates in the mediatic circus of
cinematography, television, newspapers and magazines: beings who were kissed by
luck and therefore (it is difficult to see if it was a cause or an outcome)
rose to notoriety. They offer to the international public their model of
behavior, regardless if the public accepts it or not. Therefore, to advertise
to the public a new way of life is an unavoidable aspect of their job.

Sinologist
and journalist Orville Schell, who investigated the links between Hollywood and
the exiled Tibetan government, wrote on “Newsweek” about the “Hollywood
Connection” hatched up by the Dalai Lama. Basically, “Since he doesn't have
embassies, and he has no political power, he has to seek other kinds.
Hollywood is a kind of country of its own, and he's established a
kind of embassy there.” [1]

There’s
nothing really new under the sun: Benito Mussolini required to be written above
the Cinecittà’s film studios, in block capital letters, that: “CINEMA IS THE
MOST POWERFUL WEAPON.” With the difference that Mussolini had openly promised
to create a race of warriors, while on the contrary Buddhism — at least
apparently —presents itself as the only way to peace.

A
religion that promises interior serenity before all every day’s worries; that
presents itself as harmonious with all things (and with nature, since ecology
is a value that cannot be renounced); that promises physical health (and weight
loss, another obsession) cannot but make an impression on actors and actresses,
who for the most part are slightly anxious people, obsessed with the need to be
liked and afflicted by perennial doubts about their physical shape: people who
live in a disharmonious relation with the surrounding reality, whether they’re
successful or not.

Movie actors, if we really think
about it, represent the ideal soft belly from which to start any expansionist
plan: the performative work often makes them insecure (an actor puts his body
and his art in a motion picture, the work coincides with his or her very
person); nevertheless, stars have such a hold on the public — who rarely
perceives the desperation on which the star system is based — that they are
able, ever more often, to sway their fans’ opinions.

So,
with the arrival of the Buddha in Hollywood, celebrities offered their flank to
something that maybe they didn’t even fully understand: a vast geopolitical
game that involves China, the new superpower to appear on the world stage, as
well as, in a much more sinister way, the apocalyptic project of the Kalachakra, the dominion of Shambala,
the return of the Chakravartin, the
master of the world…the entire arsenal on which the Tantras rely.

The
sexual aspect of the Tantric practices that could be of interest to the high
society of the motion-pictures’ world actually plays a secondary role, because
after all it is a private matter, while the political characteristic of this
process is, as we were saying, a public safety issue that produces huge
gatherings of people and diplomatic accidents.

The
first great ambassador of the Buddhist cause was, without a doubt, actor Richard
Gere. He was little more than a pretty boy, when he modeled — striking poses
with a slightly homosexual tone — for his childhood friend Herb Ritts, a good
black and white photographer who died of AIDS in 2002.

The
rumors that Gere was a closet homosexual, as well as the other urban legends
about his improbable zoophilic tastes, were quickly put to rest by his marriage
with a very beautiful model.

Richard
Gere rose to fame playing a callboy in the movie American Gigolo and his status as a superstar was consolidated by
another great success in the same meretricious vein, Pretty Woman. Gere the man drove women crazy (after all, his job
required it), but with a specific difference: besides young girls (who are the
basic audience in the hysterics that surround the stars), older women, perhaps
those in odor of divorce, also seemed to like him (as they liked his gigolo
character in his most famous role). These women also happen to be a favored
target of Buddhist proselytism, which obviously could never find a fertile
terrain among people who are firmly married within different religious
traditions.

Gere
became acquainted with Buddhism during a trip to Nepal in 1978. From that
moment on, his passion led him to become to all intents and purposes one of the
true eminences of the Tibetan diplomatic action in the world.

Richard Gere is an official enemy of the People’s Republic of China, who
forbade him to set foot again in her territory and has even convinced the
Academy of Motion Pictures, the institute that presides over the awarding of
the Oscars, not to let Gere present the ceremony again, because in the past he
had seized the opportunity to blast China over the violation of human rights in
Tibet.

The height of spite was reached in Red
Corner, a motion picture in which Richard Gere points to the Chinese
(especially the big shots of the armed forces) as corrupted monsters, willing
to commit any possible abuse. Gere founded Tibet House, a Tibetan cultural
center within Columbia University, sits in several boards of directors of
pro-Tibetan associations, finances monasteries (including apparently the one in
Pomaia, Tuscany) and tries to extend the fight to every area of his work as a
public figure.

As Lancia Delta automobile’s spokesperson in 2008, he managed to stain
indelibly the relations between the FIAT group and the People’s Republic,
because in a very revealing ad he travelled in the Italian car from Hollywood
all the way to Tibet. The income from the ad went right to the Gere Foundation,
an institution that regularly plans anti-Chinese campaigns. FIAT had to
apologize to the Chinese authorities.

In conclusion, Richard Gere, who has never hidden his role as the close
confidant of the Dalai Lama, acts more as a political activist than as a movie
star. Therefore, it wouldn’t be incorrect to say that he’s an agent of the
exiled Tibetan government.

But there is another “star” that is certainly less glamorous and famous
than Richard Gere, but that nevertheless in the Buddhist arena is at the
forefront. Supposedly Richard Gere hates him, and it’s understandable, because
apparently at pro-Tibetan public events the American Gigolo must always sit
several rows back, behind this unsuspected and undeniably comical new entry in
the Shangri-La of celluloid.

But the furious Richard Gere shouldn’t get so upset, because at the base
of it all there are precise and unquestionable theological reasons. The person
in question is Steven Seagal, the very tall and unifacial interpreter of action
movies, of which some (for example, Under
Siege) were well received by the American audience. In his movies Seagal
practices Aikido and handles knives very well; he’s a man of a few words, who
is rarely troubled by his enemies, whether they are terrible drug traffickers
or mad terrorists.

The fact is that Steven Seagal was recognized by the Tibetan sect
Nyingmapa (a competitor, albeit small, of the Dalai Lama’s Gelugpas) as the
reincarnation of an important Lama who lived centuries ago, Lama Chungrag
Dorje. It was the head of the sect, an authoritative Buddhist figure, the Lama
Penor Rinpoche, that confirmed that the action movies hero was in every respect
a precious tulku.

Seagal Chungrag Dorje

Even if it’s possible that Steven Seagal bought his “title,” by now the
matter is irreversible; and in 1997 Seagal could be seen in Bodh Gaya (Bihar,
India) sitting under the tree of the bodhi,
the very spot in which the Buddha received enlightenment. Hundreds of
surrounding monks were being blessed by Seagal, who looked very satisfied of
his transition (unique in the history of cinema) from star to god.

All Steven Seagal’s movies contain an exorbitant amount of violence. Moreover, each mission our hero is assigned
is carried out with a coldness devoid of any emotion. Whether he is a soldier
dealing with terrorists or a cop fighting drug dealers, in Seagal’s movies the
hero is cold and invincible, the perfect operator in the art of killing. But
the brutality of Seagal’s movies doesn’t seem to bother that Buddhist clergy
who regards him as the reincarnation of one of their important colleagues.

The matter of cinematographic violence also recurs in the case of Uma
Karuna Thurman. In the movie Kill Bill,
the two-part work by that director painfully obsessed with vengeance, Quentin
Tarantino, Uma commits a massacre after another, going as far as quartering
with a katana as many as eighty-seven people in one single scene; with
amputated limbs, eyes torn out with the fingers and blood that literally flows
in torrents.

And yet such violence shouldn’t figure in her moral framework, even less
in her Buddhist father’s, who nevertheless declared that he enjoys his
daughter’s violent movies too.

Versatile actress endowed with an almost alien beauty, Uma Thurman, blond
and blue eyed, is actually a second generation Buddhist. Her mother was a beautiful
German-Swedish model who was briefly married to the prophet of LSD Timothy
Leary. Beauty was also the trait of Uma’s grandmother, whose features were
sculpted in the statue of the woman who has welcomed those who enter the
Swedish harbor of Smygehuk since 1930.

Uma’s father Robert is instead a very famous scholar (he’s a professor at
Columbia University) in the subject of Tibetan Buddhism; though it would be
safe to say that Dr. Thurman is also a sort of spokesperson for the Dalai Lama
in Western universities. After a long journey among the Sufis in Turkey and in
India, Thurman eventually found his way in the early nineteen sixties, becoming
the first American to be ordained a Tibetan monk; something that he doesn’t
tire to remind to his colleagues Tibetologists.

The Dalai Lama and Robert Thurman

Thurman, who is a veritable bulldog of the Tibetan cause, was named one
the twenty-five most influential people in the United States in 1997; the same
year in which Hollywood dished out the two biographic pro-Lamaist movies Seven years in Tibet and Kundun.

The Kundun’s favorite New York apostle — who’s also the co-founder with
Richard Gere of the above-mentioned Tibet House — in 1993 told an audience of
Western students in Dharamsala that if they wanted to become masters of the Vajrayana they should show up with a
plate of feces and a fork and eat that rich dish, hence complying with the
doctrine of the rochig (samarasa in Sanskrit), that is, “the
only flavor”: the undifferentiated state of the enlightened mind.

In 1996, Dr. Thurman oversaw an exhibit on the Kalachakra, in Bonn, Germany, that included a grand finale centered
on the war of Shambala: a painting illustrated with minutia the massacres of
the “Buddhist Armageddon” — that’s how the final battle was referred to by the
exhibit catalogue, in which the professor got carried away by his enthusiasm
for the restoration of the dominion of Shambala over the fate of the world that
will be finally wrested away from the forces of evil. And during an annexed
conference Dr Thurman talked, not without shocking some in audience, about his
project of global conversion to Buddhism, and the future dominion of the Dalai
Lama over the masses who will have become anti-militarist, anti-materialist and
devoted to collective monasticism.

In his essay, The Inner Revolution,
Dr. Thurman adds that the true modern era began in Tibet in the year 1500; the
European revolutions, whether social, political or industrial, do not count,
because the future lies in Buddhist spirituality. In his other book, Essential Tibetan Buddhism, Dr. Thurman
advances the truly captivating thought that the occupation of Tibet by Mao
Zedong was really an act mystically planned by the Lamas, who therefore were
forced to undergo a process of purification of their creed and then, contrary
to what they had done during the previous
millennium, found themselves in the position to be able to spread their
religion throughout the world.

The conversion to Buddhism of America is the task that Dr. Thurman has
assigned to himself, and he is confident he’ll be able to witness it in his
lifetime. The Hollywoodian success of his daughter — who thanks to her tabloid
love stories managed to work her way not only in the Mecca of the movie
industry but also in the London’s high finances circles — has surely helped Dr.
Thurman’s Buddhocratic propaganda scheme and the plan of global dissemination
of the religion that was paradoxically inaugurated with the expulsion from
Lhasa.

The scheme is rather clear, even and especially if one looks at its
darker side. Robert Thurman was ordained a monk by the Dalai Lama himself, but
the person who looked after his studies was a Kalmyk monk, Geshe Wangyal (1901-
1983). In the initiation chain, Wangyal was in turn initiated by the
controversial Lama Agvan Dorzhiev (1854-1938) who was an important player in
the last phase of the geopolitical clash between the British and the Russian
empires that has been called The Great Game.

Dorzhiev, who was born by the
great Lake Baikal, was sent by the 13th Dalai Lama to maintain the
ties with the Russian Czar, and shortly before the October revolution he was
dispatched to Saint Petersburg to open a temple and, practically, to obtain the
conversion of as many Czarist aristocrats as possible.

Dorzhiev maintained that the Czarina Alexandra was the reincarnation of
the Tara Bianca, a Buddhist goddess, and that the Romanovs were the descendants
of the dynasty of the Suchandra, the rulers of Shambala. For the high society
of that time, like for today’s Hollywood elite, Buddhism became very trendy,
and Dorzhiev enjoyed a lot of support.

Practically speaking, it is the
same job that Dr. Thurman is attempting to do now, a few decades later, but in
a different empire. And on July 14, 2004 it was Dr. Thurman himself who
celebrated the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the birth of Agvan
Dorzhiev, in the Saint Petersburg’s Buddhist temple.

Inasmuch as Agvan Dorzhiev is recognized as the reincarnation of the
angry divinity Vajrabhairava (the
“Ferocious Adamantine One”), it is not unthinkable that part of that evil
spirit could also be found in Dr. Thurman, since according to the Lamaist
reincarnation mentality the spirit of the master lives in each of his
disciples, in virtue of the initiation chain.

If history, like Tibetans believe, is dominated by demons and spirits,
then the history of the Thurmans is perfectly in line with the plan: with
spirits that fly over Czars and movie stars; and demons driven away from Tibet,
who will exact their revenge conquering the world.

But the Dalai Lama wasn’t the only one that recruited celebrities. The
second most important agent of Buddhist proselytism is the Soka Gakkai, a sect
founded on the teachings of the monk Nichiren Daishonin (1222-1282), who left
apocalyptic sermons (he called the final era of Japan, Mappo) and professed ideas of outright intolerance towards other
religions.

Nichiren’s teachings suited perfectly the ideology of the so-called
“Japanese Fascists” (of the 20th century) who nevertheless jailed
the two founders of the sect, Josei Toda and Tsunesaburo Makiguchi; not because
they opposed the militarist violence of Japan in those years, but because they
had refused to worship the goddess Amaterasu, the main divinity of the other
great Japanese religion, Shinto. In other words, it was not an act of heroic
resistance on the part of the Soka Gakkai sect, who boast a story of early
martyrs and catacombs, but an act of religious intolerance instead.

Unfortunately, the nationalist and violent aspects of the Nichiren’s
teachings today have been almost forgotten but, even remaining on a more
concrete ground, there is certainly no lack of controversy as far as the Soka
Gakkai sect is concerned.

Soka Gakkai was the religious movement that managed, best than any other,
to attract the Japanese masses who were still shocked by the changes brought
about by the defeat in WWII. The movement, led by the charismatic leader
Daisaku Ikeda, soon grew out of proportion, but managed to set up hundreds of
centers throughout the country, in the universities and lastly it even
organized its own political projection represented in parliament, the Komeito
Party. This combination of politics and religion generated much controversy.

Ikeda at the Coliseum in Rome. 1963

On a parallel track, the Soka Gakkai — that is based on the adoration of
the sutra of the lotus and the belief
that salvation may be achieved through the repetition of a mantra — took action
to conquer the minds of foreign peoples, more and more desirous of that
spiritual stability that the modern world seems to want to deny. Today the SGI
(Soka Gakkai International) claims twelve millions adepts.

In the United States the sect achieved many conversions among
African-Americans: the first to blaze the trail was jazz pianist Herbie
Hancock, followed by the public conversion of singer Tina Turner.

Footballer Roberto Baggio is maybe the best known Italian member of the
sect. At the 1994 Soccer World Cup, he revealed that it was thanks to an
invocation to the Buddha that he had gotten the strength to score the
unhoped-for goal that put Italy ahead of Nigeria and qualified her for the
quarter-finals. We were not given to understand if Baggio also recited a mantra
before kicking the penalty that came to represented the peak (albeit negative)
of his career: it was the decisive free kick of the final game with Brazil and
Baggio (although he was a specialist of set kicks) inexplicably kicked it too
high.

Italian actress Sabina Guzzanti, who’s a convinced Soka Gakkai’s practicing
faithful, also did not seem to have attained that state of absolute peace she
declared to receive from Buddhism; at least not judging from her acts, which
were always charged with a destructive fury against former Italian Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi; or from the statements she made at a speech in
which she hoped to see the Pope in hell, sexually tormented by homosexual
devils.

The anti-Berlusconi Italian heroin must have really lived with uneasiness the
time, in the early 2000’s, in which the Italian chapter of the Soka Gakkai was
almost divided, when a staunchly pro-Berlusconi part of the leadership
attempted to impose its view to the rest of the movement.[2]

The last catch of the Soka Gakkai recruiters was actor Orlando Bloom, one
of the most promising young Hollywood actors. It seems that even his new wife,
Australian model Miranda Kerr, was lured in.

A French government commission has
established that the movement can be called in every respect a “sect,” whose
former members have denounced has a sort of pyramidal body, based more on
marketing than on compassion, where the exploitation of the adepts and even
what looked like attempts of “brain washing” are common practices (Guyard
Report 1995-1999).

Ikeda, the most prominent figure in the group, looked for legitimization
in politics. He met with Margaret Thatcher and Fidel Castro, and he got his picture
taken with the omni-present Nelson Mandela; (his socializing with Dictators
Manuel Noriega and Nicolae Ceausescu today is kept in the shadow). He built his
own very rich art collection (including a Renoir that was paid thirty million
Euros), and in his trips he’s always followed by aids who carry bags full of
cash.

Ikea directs the movement from Japan, where he keeps the molds of the
holy gohonzon’s: the objects sacred
to the sect that were obtained from calligraphic writings of Nichiren himself.
Practically speaking, he holds the keys of the legitimization of the whole
religion.

Ikeda is the object of endless criticism for his alleged
authoritarianism, but the adepts worship him and are always very moved by every
one of his visits. In 1991, Ikeda was irrevocably excommunicated by the
Nichiren Shōshū, the school of Nichiren Buddhism from which, at least formally,
he depended. The anti-Ikeda on-line forums, in every language, are countless.

Regardless of how controversial he is, Ikeda remains the Pope of Soka
Gakkai. Because, in the final account, whether it is Ikeda, the Dalai Lama or
any other religious leader, it is always about one thing: to obtain the same
status of the Roman Pontiff, who is maybe the most universal celebrity the
world has seen in the last two millennia.

To replace the Pope is the automatic and inevitable secret dream of all
the Buddhocrats.